1991
DOI: 10.1029/91jb01258
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The Grenville Front Tectonic Zone: Results from the 1986 Great Lakes Onshore Seismic Wide‐Angle Reflection and Refraction Experiment

Abstract: The Grenville Front, which marks the orogenic boundary between the Archean Superior Structural Province and the much younger Grenville Province to the southeast, is one of the major tectonic features of the Canadian Shield. Within Canada, it is approximately 1900 km in length extending from the north shore of Lake Huron across Ontario and Quebec to Labrador. In 1986, a major coincident onship near‐vertical reflection and onshore wide‐angle reflection/refraction experiment (GLIMPCE–Great Lakes International Mul… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(13 citation statements)
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“…A pre‐Grenville age is usually associated with this intrusion and other intrusions forming the ECGH based upon geophysical and geological similarities with the 1.1 Ga U‐Pb age‐dated MCR [ Van Schmus and Hinze , ]. The location of the Front, the westernmost location of deformation and high‐grade metamorphism associated with the Grenville orogeny, is enigmatic south of exposures in Canada and below Lake Huron [ Epill and Mereu , ]. What is probably the Grenville Front is imaged in COCORP line OH‐1 located in west central Ohio [ Pratt et al ., ; Culotta et al ., ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A pre‐Grenville age is usually associated with this intrusion and other intrusions forming the ECGH based upon geophysical and geological similarities with the 1.1 Ga U‐Pb age‐dated MCR [ Van Schmus and Hinze , ]. The location of the Front, the westernmost location of deformation and high‐grade metamorphism associated with the Grenville orogeny, is enigmatic south of exposures in Canada and below Lake Huron [ Epill and Mereu , ]. What is probably the Grenville Front is imaged in COCORP line OH‐1 located in west central Ohio [ Pratt et al ., ; Culotta et al ., ].…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Epili and Mereu [1991] imaged steeply dipping reflectors with wide-angle data and associated positive velocity discontinues with each. A single linear reflecting horizon was assigned to each Pr branch and its spatial orientation determined through travel time inversion after the velocity structure had been obtained by modeling the primary refracted and reflected phases.…”
Section: Crustal Reflectorsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…We use the published 1:5,000,000 scale Geological Map of North America [ Reed et al ., ] to describe the surface geological characteristics in the six 2°× 2° crustal tiles centered at SNO+ (outlined in Figure ), including lithologies, boundaries between different geological terranes/provinces, and their relative proportions. Refraction seismic surveys carried out in this region provide information on the crustal velocity structure and thickness [ Mereu et al ., ; Epili and Mereu , ; Percival and West , ; Musacchio et al ., ; Winardhi and Mereu , ], whereas reflection seismic surveys and receiver function analysis provide additional constraints on the Moho depth (Figure b) [ Brown et al ., ; Eaton et al ., ; Spence et al ., ]. All of the above information is integrated into a 3‐D regional crust model.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%